Lowering thresholds for speed limit enforcement impairs peripheralobject detection and increases driver subjective workload.

Author(s)
Bowden, V.K. Loft, S. Tatasciore, M. & Visser, T.A.
Year
Abstract

Speed enforcement reduces incidences of speeding, thus reducing traffic accidents. Accordingly, it has been argued that stricter speed enforcement thresholds could further improve road safety. Effective speed monitoring however requires driver attention and effort, and human information-processing capacity is limited. Emphasizing speed monitoring may therefore reduce resource availability for other aspects ofsafe vehicle operation. The authors investigated whether lowering enforcement thresholds in a simulator setting would introduce further competition for limited cognitive and visual resources. Eighty-four young adult participants drove under conditions where they could be fined for travelling 1, 6, or 11 km/h overa 50 km/h speed-limit. Stricter speed enforcement led to greater subjective workload and significant decrements in peripheral object detection. These data indicate that the benefits of reduced speeding with stricter enforcement may be at least partially offset by greater mental demands on drivers, reducing their responses to safety-critical stimuli on the road. It is likely these results under-estimate the impactof stricter speed enforcement on real-world drivers who experience significantly greater pressures todrive at or above the speed limit. (Author/publisher)

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Publication

Library number
20180484 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Accident Analysis and Prevention, Vol. 98 (January 2017), p. 118-122, ref.

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